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Jan

George Grimaldis shares a Robert Motherwell oil on canvas (photograph) by Martin Beek on Flickr.
Wall Painting with Stripes, 1944, Robert Motherwell Art Institute of Chicago,  Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm/1.4 Robert Motherwell American, 1915-1991 Wall Painting with Stripes, 1944 Oil on canvas 137.5 x 170.5 cm (54 3/16 x 67 3/16 in.) Restricted gift of Muriel Kallis Steinberg Newman in honor of her grandchildren, Ellen Steinberg and Peter Steinberg; gift of Lannan Foundation, 1997.161 Art © Dedalus Foundation, Inc. / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY Contemporary Art Gallery 289A Of all the New York School painters, scholar and artist Robert Motherwell aligned himself most closely with modern European art and literature. An early painting by Motherwell, Wall Painting with Stripes fuses the geometric rigor found in the art of Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, and Pablo Picasso with an organic or biomorphic abstract language that is reminiscent of the imagery employed by Surrealists Max Ernst and Joan Miró. Although signed and dated 1944, this painting shows signs of having been altered over time by the artist. Pentimenti (evidence of previous compositions), including a complex network of lines that were simplified into egg-shaped forms and bulging curves, are visible underneath the vertical bands of ocher and white paint. Motherwell once wrote, “My pictures have layers of mistakes buried in them—an X-ray would disclose crimes—layers of consciousness, of willing.”

George Grimaldis shares a Robert Motherwell oil on canvas (photograph) by Martin Beek on Flickr.

Wall Painting with Stripes, 1944, Robert Motherwell

Art Institute of Chicago,
Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm/1.4

Robert Motherwell
American, 1915-1991

Wall Painting with Stripes, 1944

Oil on canvas
137.5 x 170.5 cm (54 3/16 x 67 3/16 in.)
Restricted gift of Muriel Kallis Steinberg Newman in honor of her grandchildren, Ellen Steinberg and Peter Steinberg; gift of Lannan Foundation, 1997.161
Art © Dedalus Foundation, Inc. / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY

Contemporary Art
Gallery 289A

Of all the New York School painters, scholar and artist Robert Motherwell aligned himself most closely with modern European art and literature. An early painting by Motherwell, Wall Painting with Stripes fuses the geometric rigor found in the art of Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, and Pablo Picasso with an organic or biomorphic abstract language that is reminiscent of the imagery employed by Surrealists Max Ernst and Joan Miró. Although signed and dated 1944, this painting shows signs of having been altered over time by the artist. Pentimenti (evidence of previous compositions), including a complex network of lines that were simplified into egg-shaped forms and bulging curves, are visible underneath the vertical bands of ocher and white paint. Motherwell once wrote, “My pictures have layers of mistakes buried in them—an X-ray would disclose crimes—layers of consciousness, of willing.”

  1. georgegrimaldis posted this